New Poll has Sanders Up 20pts in New Hampshire, 10 in Iowa

Mordo | Mythic Invincible!
 
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emigrate or degenerate. the choice is yours


 
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i like how quote misattribution is somehow automatically funny

conservative sense of humor is so primitive


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>preferring Hillary

>ever

>preferring someone unelectable

Okay.
Not with that attitude.


 
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>preferring Hillary

>ever

>preferring someone unelectable

Okay.
Not with that attitude.

Again, tell me.

How many independents and GOP voters do you honestly think are going to vote for a self-proclaimed "socialist" - especially from the swing states of Iowa, Wisconsin, North Carolina, Virginia, etc?

He is not going to win on false promises and far-left liberals. That will not happen.



 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
conservative sense of humor is so primitive
Not that many people actually see me as a conservative.


 
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i wasn't referring specifically to you, even though i did notice you liked the post

that was more geared to rustle mordo's jimmies


Anonymous (User Deleted) | Legendary Invincible!
 
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>preferring Hillary

>ever

>preferring someone unelectable

Okay.
Not with that attitude.

Again, tell me.

How many independents and GOP voters do you honestly think are going to vote for a self-proclaimed "socialist" - especially from the swing states of Iowa, Wisconsin, North Carolina, Virginia, etc?

He is not going to win on false promises and far-left liberals. That will not happen.
GOPers don't vote Democrat anyway, so that point is moot. Likewise, Democrats will vote for their candidate because Sanders would be better than any Republican president (plus, he's Jewish, so he fulfills that silly little 'minority candidate' requirement). There's still over a year before the election day, so Bernie has plenty of time to motivate the base. And when looking at Bernie's actual views, he's not as much of a 'socialist' as the name would imply.

But more importantly, Hillary will continue to be dogged by the email scandal as long as it plays out. She's handled it horribly and it's a huge distraction from her campaign efforts. She's literally her own worst enemy.

The first Dem primary is in February--that's plenty of time for Sanders to catch up.

conservative sense of humor is so primitive
Not that many people actually see me as a conservative.
lol


 
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but yeah meta you're definitely conservative

don't let anyone tell you different


 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
GOPers don't vote Democrat anyway
9pc of Republicans voted for Obama. . .


Quote
lol
I don't know why that's funny.


 
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GOPers don't vote Democrat anyway
9pc of Republicans voted for Obama. . .
I think he's referring to partisans.


 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
I think he's referring to partisans.
Then it's a fucking stupid thing to say. Of course partisan Republicans don't vote Democrat.

Otherwise they wouldn't be partisan.


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9pc of Republicans voted for Obama. . .
9% of Republicans is negligible, but I should have said 'vast majority'.
Quote
I don't know why that's funny.
Oh.


 
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I think he's referring to partisans.
Then it's a fucking stupid thing to say. Of course partisan Republicans don't vote Democrat.

Otherwise they wouldn't be partisan.
right

tell icywind that—he made the point


 
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I think he's referring to partisans.
Then it's a fucking stupid thing to say. Of course partisan Republicans don't vote Democrat.

Otherwise they wouldn't be partisan.

The problem in America (Not sure how it's fairing for you Brits) is that the partisan divide has simply expanded in American politics - to the point that even the Supreme Court is getting involved in this. Of course there are voters who will always vote Republican and Democratic, but the more that happens, the more the moderate and independent voters matter in an election.

They will increasingly decide the outcome, the more that the 40-42% of Republicans vote as such, and vice versa for the Democrats.


GOPers don't vote Democrat anyway, so that point is moot. Likewise, Democrats will vote for their candidate because Sanders would be better than any Republican president (plus, he's Jewish, so he fulfills that silly little 'minority candidate' requirement). There's still over a year before the election day, so Bernie has plenty of time to motivate the base. And when looking at Bernie's actual views, he's not as much of a 'socialist' as the name would imply.

I do not even know where to begin.

First off, the notion that "GOPers don't vote Democratic", while seems nice, is false. In every elections, Presidential or Midterm, there is a good average of 5-10% of the opposing party who votes for your candidate (IE, Democrats who vote for McCain and Republicans for Obama). These moderate voters, along with the independent voters, can have a huge impact in terms of the final outcome of any election.

In 2008, when Obama won in a landslide, he garnished 9% of votes from Republican voters, up from 4% for Kerry in 2004, according to the Pew Research Organization. A poll by The Economist showed even more support for Obama by Republicans, winning 22% of conservative affiliated voters, a higher proportion than any Democratic candidate since 1980, source.

Second off, the claim that Bernie's views are not "as socialist as the name implies" is even more bullshit - the guy calls himself a socialist, and his views are more align with European liberals than any other Presidential candidate in this race, or the past five elections. Not only does the guy not mention a single bit of foreign policy on his website outside of Iran (Sorry Syria, you and the migrant crisis aren't fucking important),

Instead, Bernie touts big ideas such as "Invest 1 trillion in spending against income equality, infrastructure, etc." with no set plan on how to get that money besides "More taxes!", and doubling the minimum wage in a span of three years after his election, with no plan laid out as to how that will affect the average business that isn't a god damn Wal-Mart. Even if I support an increase, I don't support such a radical one as quick.

There's also the lovely part of politicizing the Supreme Court even more, but I won't get into that.

The fact is that as many fairy tale promises that Bernie Sanders will promise, he can guarantee absolute ZERO of it, because the President Does Not Make The Laws. He is going to have to work with Congress to get anything done, which will more than likely remain, at the very least, half controlled by the Republicans. And guess what? They will go for none of this shit.

Bernie Sanders as President is going to only continue the lame-duck Presidency that has shown how broken our government system still is. If you want that, it's kind of sad.
Last Edit: September 14, 2015, 08:43:13 PM by Fagcicle


 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
9% of Republicans is negligible
Just under a tenth of Republicans is negligible?

There's ~280,000,000 adults in the US. Which puts the turnout at roughly 172,480,000. If we assume Republicans themselves had a 61.6pc turnout that would make ~81,999,999 Republicans voting. 9pc of that is ~7,400,000.

Bearing in mind we've probably underestimated Republican turnout, we have ~7,400,000 votes going to Obama for whatever reason. The difference between Obama and McCain was 10,000,000.

That's not negligible.
Last Edit: September 14, 2015, 08:41:29 PM by Executioner Sigma


 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
tell icywind that—he made the point
Icy obviously wasn't referring to partisan Republicans.


 
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The problem in America (Not sure how it's fairing for you Brits) is that the partisan divide has simply expanded in American politics - to the point that even the Supreme Court is getting involved in this. Of course there are voters who will always vote Republican and Democratic, but the more that happens, the more the moderate and independent voters matter in an election.

They will increasingly decide the outcome, the more that the 40-42% of Republicans vote as such, and vice versa for the Democrats.
It really is all just a bad joke, isn't it.

I-R-V.

I-R-V.

I-R-V.

Quote
Instead, Bernie touts big ideas such as "Invest 1 trillion in spending against income equality, infrastructure, etc." with no set plan on how to get that money besides "More taxes!", and doubling the minimum wage in a span of three years after his election, with no plan laid out as to how that will affect the average business that isn't a god damn Wal-Mart. Even if I support an increase, I don't support such a radical one as quick.
This is usually the part where I ask, "Who would you rather have, then?" because it's so incredibly fucking easy to pick apart someone's flaws while simultaneously not finding a better candidate. But I think you already mentioned Kasich.

Be honest—did you learn everything you know about Bernie from Meta?
Is that why you also support Kasich?

just wondering

because this whole post—even the way it's worded—sounds painfully similar to another post i've read on this site


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I think he's referring to partisans.
Then it's a fucking stupid thing to say. Of course partisan Republicans don't vote Democrat.

Otherwise they wouldn't be partisan.

The problem in America (Not sure how it's fairing for you Brits) is that the partisan divide has simply expanded in American politics - to the point that even the Supreme Court is getting involved in this. Of course there are voters who will always vote Republican and Democratic, but the more that happens, the more the moderate and independent voters matter in an election.

They will increasingly decide the outcome, the more that the 40-42% of Republicans vote as such, and vice versa for the Democrats.


GOPers don't vote Democrat anyway, so that point is moot. Likewise, Democrats will vote for their candidate because Sanders would be better than any Republican president (plus, he's Jewish, so he fulfills that silly little 'minority candidate' requirement). There's still over a year before the election day, so Bernie has plenty of time to motivate the base. And when looking at Bernie's actual views, he's not as much of a 'socialist' as the name would imply.

I do not even know where to begin.

First off, the notion that "GOPers don't vote Democratic", while seems nice, is false. In every elections, Presidential or Midterm, there is a good average of 5-10% of the opposing party who votes for your candidate (IE, Democrats who vote for McCain and Republicans for Obama). These moderate voters, along with the independent voters, can have a huge impact in terms of the final outcome of any election.

In 2008, when Obama won in a landslide, he garnished 9% of votes from Republican voters, up from 4% for Kerry in 2004, according to the Pew Research Organization. A poll by The Economist showed even more support for Obama by Republicans, winning 22% of conservative affiliated voters, a higher proportion than any Democratic candidate since 1980, source.

Second off, the claim that Bernie's views are not "as socialist as the name implies" is even more bullshit - the guy calls himself a socialist, and his views are more align with European liberals than any other Presidential candidate in this race, or the past five elections. Not only does the guy not mention a single bit of foreign policy on his website outside of Iran (Sorry Syria, you and the migrant crisis aren't fucking important),

Instead, Bernie touts big ideas such as "Invest 1 trillion in spending against income equality, infrastructure, etc." with no set plan on how to get that money besides "More taxes!", and doubling the minimum wage in a span of three years after his election, with no plan laid out as to how that will affect the average business that isn't a god damn Wal-Mart. Even if I support an increase, I don't support such a radical one as quick.

There's also the lovely part of politicizing the Supreme Court even more, but I won't get into that.

The fact is that as many fairy tale promises that Bernie Sanders will promise, he can guarantee absolute ZERO of it, because the President Does Not Make The Laws. He is going to have to work with Congress to get anything done, which will more than likely remain, at the very least, half controlled by the Republicans. And guess what? They will go for none of this shit.

Bernie Sanders as President is going to only continue the lame-duck Presidency that has shown how broken our government system still is. If you want that, it's kind of sad.
Icy, Hillary is an establishment Democrat. She isn't even that liberal to begin with. She's been behind the times on the issues that matter most to liberals; Bernie's the actual progressive candidate who more closely reflects the current views of the party. I never claimed that the President makes laws, either; Hillary won't have congressional Republicans on her side anyway, because they still think she put on a ski mask and personally assassinated Ambassador Stevens, and that her confession (and proof that she revenge cuck'd Bill) is hidden somewhere on her suspiciously private server.

A Hillary presidency would be more like another four years of Obama, and the country's getting tired of him. That's been the gist of Bernie's campaign, and so far he's making the milestones they said he'd never make.

9% of Republicans is negligible
Just under a tenth of Republicans is negligible?

There's ~280,000,000 adults in the US. Which puts the turnout at roughly 172,480,000. If we assume Republicans themselves had a 61.6pc turnout that would make ~81,999,999 Republicans voting. 10pc of that is ~8,000,000.

Bearing in mind we've probably underestimated Republican turnout, we have 8,000,000 votes going to Obama for whatever reason. The difference between Obama and McCain was 10,000,000.

That's not negligible.
The point of my statement should be clear. It wasn't meant to be interpreted literally. I can't think of a time when that 10% of Republicans was as critical to winning a general election as, say, the 6-7% of swing voters, especially when contrasted with similar numbers of Democrats voting for the Republican candidate. It generally evens out.
Last Edit: September 14, 2015, 08:54:21 PM by Kupo


 
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Quote
Instead, Bernie touts big ideas such as "Invest 1 trillion in spending against income equality, infrastructure, etc." with no set plan on how to get that money besides "More taxes!", and doubling the minimum wage in a span of three years after his election, with no plan laid out as to how that will affect the average business that isn't a god damn Wal-Mart. Even if I support an increase, I don't support such a radical one as quick.
This is usually the part where I ask, "Who would you rather have, then?" because it's so incredibly fucking easy to pick apart someone's flaws while simultaneously not finding a better candidate. But I think you already mentioned Kasich.

Be honest—did you learn everything you know about Bernie from Meta?
Is that why you also support Kasich?

just wondering

I dual major in Political Science, and barely speak to Meta outside of him kicking my ass in debates here...

So, no. It's the most sensible solution.


 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
did you learn everything you know about Bernie from Meta?
Let's be fair here. I don't misrepresent or omit any of his views, and I give him credit where he deserves it. I'm the same with any politician.


 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
Bernie's the actual progressive candidate who more closely reflects the current views of the party.
Does that actually matter if his ideas are shit, though?


 
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I think he's referring to partisans.
Then it's a fucking stupid thing to say. Of course partisan Republicans don't vote Democrat.

Otherwise they wouldn't be partisan.

The problem in America (Not sure how it's fairing for you Brits) is that the partisan divide has simply expanded in American politics - to the point that even the Supreme Court is getting involved in this. Of course there are voters who will always vote Republican and Democratic, but the more that happens, the more the moderate and independent voters matter in an election.

They will increasingly decide the outcome, the more that the 40-42% of Republicans vote as such, and vice versa for the Democrats.


GOPers don't vote Democrat anyway, so that point is moot. Likewise, Democrats will vote for their candidate because Sanders would be better than any Republican president (plus, he's Jewish, so he fulfills that silly little 'minority candidate' requirement). There's still over a year before the election day, so Bernie has plenty of time to motivate the base. And when looking at Bernie's actual views, he's not as much of a 'socialist' as the name would imply.

I do not even know where to begin.

First off, the notion that "GOPers don't vote Democratic", while seems nice, is false. In every elections, Presidential or Midterm, there is a good average of 5-10% of the opposing party who votes for your candidate (IE, Democrats who vote for McCain and Republicans for Obama). These moderate voters, along with the independent voters, can have a huge impact in terms of the final outcome of any election.

In 2008, when Obama won in a landslide, he garnished 9% of votes from Republican voters, up from 4% for Kerry in 2004, according to the Pew Research Organization. A poll by The Economist showed even more support for Obama by Republicans, winning 22% of conservative affiliated voters, a higher proportion than any Democratic candidate since 1980, source.

Second off, the claim that Bernie's views are not "as socialist as the name implies" is even more bullshit - the guy calls himself a socialist, and his views are more align with European liberals than any other Presidential candidate in this race, or the past five elections. Not only does the guy not mention a single bit of foreign policy on his website outside of Iran (Sorry Syria, you and the migrant crisis aren't fucking important),

Instead, Bernie touts big ideas such as "Invest 1 trillion in spending against income equality, infrastructure, etc." with no set plan on how to get that money besides "More taxes!", and doubling the minimum wage in a span of three years after his election, with no plan laid out as to how that will affect the average business that isn't a god damn Wal-Mart. Even if I support an increase, I don't support such a radical one as quick.

There's also the lovely part of politicizing the Supreme Court even more, but I won't get into that.

The fact is that as many fairy tale promises that Bernie Sanders will promise, he can guarantee absolute ZERO of it, because the President Does Not Make The Laws. He is going to have to work with Congress to get anything done, which will more than likely remain, at the very least, half controlled by the Republicans. And guess what? They will go for none of this shit.

Bernie Sanders as President is going to only continue the lame-duck Presidency that has shown how broken our government system still is. If you want that, it's kind of sad.
Icy, Hillary is an establishment Democrat. She isn't even that liberal to begin with. She's been behind the times on the issues that matter most to liberals; Bernie's the actual progressive candidate who more closely reflects the current views of the party. I never claimed that the President makes laws, either; Hillary won't have congressional Republicans on her side anyway, because they still think she put on a ski mask and personally assassinated Ambassador Stevens, and that her confession (and proof that she revenge cuck'd Bill) is hidden somewhere on her suspiciously private server.

A Hillary presidency would be more like another four years of Obama, and the country's getting tired of him. That's been the gist of Bernie's campaign, and he's making the milestones they said he'd never make.

Where in that post did I even mention Clinton's name? Also, you've shared that Atlantic article before - there's no need to keep sharing it, unless they've suddenly decided to add in new information.

America does not a European liberal - they need a President candidate who can get past this shitty partisanship and actually start governing to fix the shitty issues that continue to affect our country. That is never going to be Bernie, and you're right that it probably will not be Hilary (Though she stands a better chance than Sanders).

Pending it being a Trump/Cruz GOP ticket, I'll likely actually vote for them next year, because Sanders as President is going to be a fucking disaster.

Quote me on that.


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Bernie's the actual progressive candidate who more closely reflects the current views of the party.
Does that actually matter if his ideas are shit, though?
It's not about the money facts, it's about sending a message. (Pretty much every campaign ever.)



>.> It should matter, but it doesn't.


 
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did you learn everything you know about Bernie from Meta?
Let's be fair here. I don't misrepresent or omit any of his views, and I give him credit where he deserves it. I'm the same with any politician.
And that's good. I don't mean to imply otherwise—I was just suspicious that Icy may not have come up with his own conclusions. Regurgitating someone else's opinion can only get you so far. I'll give him the benefit of the doubt.


 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
Pending it being a Trump/Cruz GOP ticket, I'll likely actually vote for them next year, because Sanders as President is going to be a fucking disaster.
I wouldn't go that far.

I'd throw my vote away to the Libertarians if Trump were on the ballot for the GOP.


 
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Pending it being a Trump/Cruz GOP ticket, I'll likely actually vote for them next year, because Sanders as President is going to be a fucking disaster.
I wouldn't go that far.

I'd throw my vote away to the Libertarians if Trump were on the ballot for the GOP.

Came off as poorly worded.

Unless it is a Trump and/or Cruz GOP ticket, I will likely vote for them this year. Hopefully it's Kasich, maybe even Carson if he keeps his religious views out of the front and center.

I still support Clinton, however, until the opposite side weeds out and we get a better idea of who is honestly going to be running in the generals.


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I think he's referring to partisans.
Then it's a fucking stupid thing to say. Of course partisan Republicans don't vote Democrat.

Otherwise they wouldn't be partisan.

The problem in America (Not sure how it's fairing for you Brits) is that the partisan divide has simply expanded in American politics - to the point that even the Supreme Court is getting involved in this. Of course there are voters who will always vote Republican and Democratic, but the more that happens, the more the moderate and independent voters matter in an election.

They will increasingly decide the outcome, the more that the 40-42% of Republicans vote as such, and vice versa for the Democrats.


GOPers don't vote Democrat anyway, so that point is moot. Likewise, Democrats will vote for their candidate because Sanders would be better than any Republican president (plus, he's Jewish, so he fulfills that silly little 'minority candidate' requirement). There's still over a year before the election day, so Bernie has plenty of time to motivate the base. And when looking at Bernie's actual views, he's not as much of a 'socialist' as the name would imply.

I do not even know where to begin.

First off, the notion that "GOPers don't vote Democratic", while seems nice, is false. In every elections, Presidential or Midterm, there is a good average of 5-10% of the opposing party who votes for your candidate (IE, Democrats who vote for McCain and Republicans for Obama). These moderate voters, along with the independent voters, can have a huge impact in terms of the final outcome of any election.

In 2008, when Obama won in a landslide, he garnished 9% of votes from Republican voters, up from 4% for Kerry in 2004, according to the Pew Research Organization. A poll by The Economist showed even more support for Obama by Republicans, winning 22% of conservative affiliated voters, a higher proportion than any Democratic candidate since 1980, source.

Second off, the claim that Bernie's views are not "as socialist as the name implies" is even more bullshit - the guy calls himself a socialist, and his views are more align with European liberals than any other Presidential candidate in this race, or the past five elections. Not only does the guy not mention a single bit of foreign policy on his website outside of Iran (Sorry Syria, you and the migrant crisis aren't fucking important),

Instead, Bernie touts big ideas such as "Invest 1 trillion in spending against income equality, infrastructure, etc." with no set plan on how to get that money besides "More taxes!", and doubling the minimum wage in a span of three years after his election, with no plan laid out as to how that will affect the average business that isn't a god damn Wal-Mart. Even if I support an increase, I don't support such a radical one as quick.

There's also the lovely part of politicizing the Supreme Court even more, but I won't get into that.

The fact is that as many fairy tale promises that Bernie Sanders will promise, he can guarantee absolute ZERO of it, because the President Does Not Make The Laws. He is going to have to work with Congress to get anything done, which will more than likely remain, at the very least, half controlled by the Republicans. And guess what? They will go for none of this shit.

Bernie Sanders as President is going to only continue the lame-duck Presidency that has shown how broken our government system still is. If you want that, it's kind of sad.
Icy, Hillary is an establishment Democrat. She isn't even that liberal to begin with. She's been behind the times on the issues that matter most to liberals; Bernie's the actual progressive candidate who more closely reflects the current views of the party. I never claimed that the President makes laws, either; Hillary won't have congressional Republicans on her side anyway, because they still think she put on a ski mask and personally assassinated Ambassador Stevens, and that her confession (and proof that she revenge cuck'd Bill) is hidden somewhere on her suspiciously private server.

A Hillary presidency would be more like another four years of Obama, and the country's getting tired of him. That's been the gist of Bernie's campaign, and he's making the milestones they said he'd never make.

Where in that post did I even mention Clinton's name? Also, you've shared that Atlantic article before - there's no need to keep sharing it, unless they've suddenly decided to add in new information.

America does not a European liberal - they need a President candidate who can get past this shitty partisanship and actually start governing to fix the shitty issues that continue to affect our country. That is never going to be Bernie, and you're right that it probably will not be Hilary (Though she stands a better chance than Sanders).

Pending it being a Trump/Cruz GOP ticket, I'll likely actually vote for them next year, because Sanders as President is going to be a fucking disaster.

Quote me on that.
Hillary is the definition of a partisan. I really can't imagine her doing anything else but maintaining the status quo.

>.> and I would argue that a Celebrity-in-Chief would be infinitely worse than anything we can imagine. We don't need a real mockery made out of the presidency.

Trump only has like... what, two actual policies? Rounding up all the illegals would be preposterously costly, first of all.
Last Edit: September 14, 2015, 09:06:25 PM by Kupo


 
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Hillary is the definition of a partisan. I really can't imagine her doing anything else but maintaining the status quo.

A more moderate candidate has a much stronger chance of working with the opposing side than, say, someone who is far-left equivalent of Cruz.

You must agree to at least that.


Anonymous (User Deleted) | Legendary Invincible!
 
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6,364 posts
 
Hillary is the definition of a partisan. I really can't imagine her doing anything else but maintaining the status quo.

A more moderate candidate has a much stronger chance of working with the opposing side than, say, someone who is far-left equivalent of Cruz.

You must agree to at least that.
Yeah, I have to agree.

But realistically, no candidate would ever accomplish half the things they set out to do (figuratively speaking, *ahem*).